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Arabella Charlotte Scott was born 7 May 1886 in Dunoon, Scotland. Her mother was a teacher and her father served as a captain in the Indian army for more than 25 years.[1][2]

She graduated with an MA from the University of Edinburgh and went on to become a schoolteacher, living with her sister, Muriel Scott, in Edinburgh.[1] Scott and her sister were advocates for women's suffrage and were active speakers in Scotland for the cause.[1]

In 1909, Scott and her sister Muriel were both arrested on the charge of obstruction in London after they tried to hand a petition to the British Prime MinisterH. H. Asquith, on this charge the sisters served 21 days at HM Prison Holloway.[1]

Scott was arrested and released several times over the following years, under the Cat and Mouse Act. The Cat and Mouse Act was put into place so that suffragettes could not kill themselves in prison due to hunger strikes, instead when they became too weak they were released and then re-arrested at a later time.[3] On the 19 May 1913 Arabella was arrested for trying to set alight to Kelso Racecourse with Agnes and Elizabeth Thomson, and Edith Hudson.[4] They were all imprisoned at Calton jail and went on hunger strike together.[1] Scott was released under the Cat and Mouse Act on 24 May, her licence ran out and she failed to return to Calton jail.[1]

Scott was caught on 12 June and rearrested, when she returned to Calton jail she went on hunger strike again. On the 16 June she was assessed as too weak by a medical officer and was released on licence but did not return to the jail.[1].Scott was found in London on the 24 August and returned to Calton jail where she went on hunger and thirst strike.[1] On 28 August the medical officer put her forward for immediate discharge due to her health, however she had to be removed from the jail by force as she did not want to be placed on leave under licence once more.[1] The licence expired on 10 September 1913, Scott was not found until the following year.[1]

Scott worked as an organiser for the Women's Social and Political Union in the Brighton branch under the name, 'Catherine Reid',[5] she was found in May 1914 and resisted arrest.[1]Scotland Yard and the Brighton Police both had to help the police that had come from Scotland to arrest Scott as she refused to walk and had to be lifted and dragged onto trains.[1] She started her hunger and thirst strike on 2 May when she was arrested, and by 8 May was ill and allowed to leave the Calton jail under licence.[1] On 17 May Scott departed for London so that she could help the WSPU campaign against the liberal candidate in the Ipswich by-election.[1] She was due to return to jail on 22 May.[5] She was found on 19 June during a raid at a suffragette house, where she was rearrested and forced to return to jail.[1]

Scott was taken to Perth prison, instead of Calton jail, she was admitted on 20 June and released on 26 July. During this time she was force-fed three times a day. She was not allowed visitors or letters and during her imprisonment.[1] As Scott held out, the medical officer, Dr Hugh Ferguson Watson reported in daily detail on her state of mind and emotions and the long conversations the pair shared in the prison, where he sent warders out of hearing.[6]

In her 'autobiography', written largely by her niece, Francis Wheelhouse, from taped interviews, Scott described a force-feeding tube being driven into her stomach as bits of her broken teeth washed around with blood in her mouth. When she vomited after it was removed, Watson would shout at her 'You did that on purpose'. Scott also recalled that one day Watson had said to her, "Look here, it's a pity, why don't you give it all away? The government would send you over to Canada and I would personally conduct you there." [6]

Scott was once more released under licence under the Cat and Mouse Act[1].On 28 June 1914 Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated, two days after Scott's release the First World War began, with the UK joining by declaring war on Germany on 4 August.[5] The WSPU announced a truce on militant acts, the Secretary of Scotland announced on 10 August the mitigation of all suffragette sentences passed in Scottish courts including Scott's.[5]

Scott's ordeal has since been dramatised by the playwright, Ajay Close, who researched the play based on Watson's reports held in the National Archives of Scotland and from the transcripts of taped interviews with Scott.[6]